Burma
Burma (now officially called the Union of Myanmar) was a province of the Bengal Presidency until the establishment of the Burma Office in 1937 after which it was administered separately until independence in 1948.
Geography
Places in Burma:
History
The British annexed parts of Burmese territory after their victory in the 1st Burma War. Lower Burma was annexed in 1852 after the 2nd Burma War. In 1862, these territories were designated the minor province of British India, British Burma. After the 3rd Burma War in 1885, Upper Burma was annexed, and the following year, the province of Burma in British India was created, becoming a major province in 1897. This arrangement lasted until 1937, when Burma began to be administered separately by the Burma Office and the Secretary of State for India and Burma. Burma achieved independence from British rule on January 4, 1948.
Military
- 1st Burma War - 1823-24. View the FIBIS Google Books Library
- 2nd Burma War - 1852-53. View the FIBIS Google Books Library
- 3rd Burma War - 1885.
Trek Out of Burma in 1942
- The full transcriptions by Mark Steevens of the IOR M8/57 files, Evacuees from Burma, are available on this site.
- Burma from the website Koi-Hai
- Songs of The Survivors, stories about the Goan community in Burma and the Trek. Page 7, the editors preface Google Books, probably Limited View.
- Link to book reviews for White Butterflies by Colin McPhedran published 2002 and Through the Jungle of Death - A Boy's Escape from Wartime Burma by Stephen Brookes published 2000
Railways
Records
British Library
Baptisms, Marriages and Burials for Burma are included in the Bengal returns (N/1) up to 1936. Records for 1937 to 1959 are in a separate series N/10 with a single index for Burma BMBs.
LDS (Mormon)
The LDS film catalogue has the following entries:
- Burma ecclesiastical returns, registered 1937-1957.
- Registers and indexes of the Burma Office. It is unclear from the catalogue just what records these are. However, from the film notes, they appear to be indexes only (Z/M records).
FIBIS resources
- Burmese cemeteries inscriptions and photographs
External links
The FIBIS Google Books Library has books tagged: Burma |
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- Burma Wikipedia
- British rule in Burma Wikipedia
Online Books
- Shipwreck of the Juno on the coast of Aracan in 1795 and history of Aracan. Google Books
- Travels in south-eastern Asia, embracing Hindustan, Malaya, Siam, and China: with notices of numerous missionary stations, and a full account of the Burman Empire; with dissertations, tables, etc by Howard Malcolm 2nd edition 1839 2 volumes in one. Book 2 with index follows page 276 of Book 1 Google Books.
- Rough Pencillings of a Rough Trip to Rangoon in 1846 by Colesworthey Grant 1853. With illustrations Archive.org.
- Tenasserim Provinces , page 685 A Gazetteer of Southern India: with the Tenasserim Provinces and Singapore by Pharoah & Co 1855 Google Books.
- Hand-book for British Burmaby George Edward Fryer 1867 Google Books
- The British Burma Gazetteer, Volume 2 A-Z 1879 Archive.org
- Gazetteer of Upper Burma and the Shan States 1900-1901 (Archive.org) Part 1, Volume 1 includes Chapter 10, Ethnology with Vocabularies Part 2, Volume 1 A-K Part 2, Volume 2 L-P Part 2, Volume 3 R-Z
- Wild sports of Burma and Assam By Fitz William Thomas Pollok 1900 Archive.org
Burma, painted and described Robert Talbot Kelly, 1905 Archive.org
- Burma Through The Centuries by John Stuart 1910 Archive.org
- Big Game Shooting in Upper Burma George Patrick Elystan Evans 1911 Archive.org
- A civil servant in Burma by Sir Herbert Thirkell White, 1913 Archive.org
- [Burma pictures] c 1920 Archive.org
Other
- Obituary of Reuben Solomon, born Rangoon 1921, from the Sydney Morning Herald dated 24 October 2009
- This Wikipedia link mentions former De La Salle Christian Brothers Schools in Burma.
- Spike Milligan,famous for the Goon Show, born in India, attended St Paul's De La Salle Christian Brothers School in Rangoon.
- Link to a book review of Almost Englishmen: Baghdadi Jews in British Burma by Ruth Fredman Cernea 2007